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Civics 101 host Nick Capodice explains what’s causing the decline in civic participation and what we can actually do to shift power.
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Courtesy Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College (left); Julia Barnett /NHPR (right)/Courtesy Photo (left); NHPR (right)From the many depictions of George Washington, to using American Revolution motifs to recruit for WWII, the ongoing exhibition asks how the country’s revolutionary past is constantly being reconsidered.
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Donnalee Lozeau is the director of a new statewide program that will distribute roughly $200 million in federal funding this year toward rural healthcare needs in New Hampshire. Over five years, the state expects to receive a total of $1 billion dollars.
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Mohegan scholar and minister Samson Occom raised the money that helped establish Dartmouth College in 1769. The money was supposed to help build a school for Native American students, but it was instead redirected to Dartmouth.
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Who controls the waterway according to international law? And what does a blockade actually mean?
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“What we're seeing is almost a backpedaling from reforms that were made in the facility,” said Cassandra Sanchez, the state’s child advocate. The state health department and Attorney General’s office have since announced their own investigations.
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President Trump recently called for the federal government to take control of how elections are run. But in the U.S., states run their own elections. Civics 101 host Hannah McCarthy explains who’s in charge and what “nationalizing” elections could look like.
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Over 60 years ago, Portsmouth residents Betty and Barney Hill claimed they were abducted by aliens while visiting the White Mountains. The Hills are the focus of a new exhibition at the Portsmouth Historical Society.
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The show joins NHPR’s Sunday morning lineup and features conversations with celebrity guests on the beliefs that shape our lives.
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After the idea for a new library arose in 1986, the Daland Memorial Library finally made its debut in Mont Vernon in February.